One Hundred Days' Volunteers.  Indiana's quota of 100 days' troops
was eight regiments, numbering consecutively from the 132nd to the 139th, inclusive. They
were used largely for guard duty and in garrisoning necessary points, relieving veteran
troops for active field work in the important campaigns of 1864. These troops were to
perform such duty as might be required of them in any state, and were to be armed,
subsisted, clothed and paid by the United States. Upon reaching Nashville they were
assigned to railroad guard duty along the lines of the Nashville & Chattanooga,
Tennessee & Alabama, and Memphis & Charleston railroads. They were kept constantly
engaged in this work until the latter part of Aug., 1864, serving beyond the time for
which they had enlisted, keeping Sherman's lines of communication open for the
transportation of supplies to his army.

One Hundred and Thirty-fifth Indiana Infantry.
 Col., William C. Wilson; Lieut. -Col., John H. Gould; Maj., Benjamin M. Gregory.
This regiment was organized in May, 1864, being composed of companies raised in the 8th
Congressional district. Mustered in at Indianapolis in May, 1864, it left the state at
once, moving to Tennessee. It was mustered out in Aug., 1864. Strength, 930. Loss by
death, 25; desertion, 4.

Footnotes:Regimental history taken from "The Union Army" by Federal Publishing
Company, 1908 - Volume 3